http://worldtruth.tv/micro-chipping-agenda-rfid-chips-are-being-implemented/
By: Eddie Sage
Date: 2012-03-27
By explaining this process and giving example after example, Predictive Programming and the Human Microchipping Agenda is an attempt to alert the viewer to some of the ways in which we have been manipulated throughout our lives for the specific purpose of slowly but surely shepherding us all into a Hellish world of microchip implants and totalitarian control. We hope that by exposing the programming we can break the program and derail this diabolical agenda. To be successful we need your help.
We can clearly see how we slowly being brainwashed and forced to believe that it is in our benefit and convenience. We are slowly micro-chipping our children by convincing ourselves that it is for our peace of mind and for their safety. In the process we are getting them use to this kind of a way of life.
We are getting our children so use to and dependent on these ID’s and RFID chips that by the time they are adults they can not function without them.
It started with the micro-chipping of animals, first voluntarily and now often by law, and the same method is being used on humans.
Just Remember human life can not be degraded to a 16 digit RFID chip number embedded under you skin under any circumstance.
RFID Chips Being Added To Brazillian Children’s School Uniforms
The chips are placed underneath the badge of a school uniform, or on a sleeve. When a pupil passes through sensors at the school entrance, the chip sends an SMS message to parents. If they are more than 20 minutes late for class, their families are alerted with a different message: “Your child has still not arrived at school.”
Ghana preps for first biometric vote
Ghana joins Nigeria, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo who adopted the fingerprint scanning technology to help prevent electoral fraud.
Ghana hopes the bio-metric system will verify that those who are voting should be voting, and that they only vote once.
There are complications with the system. There are 23,000 polling stations in the country, but they are not interconnected to share registration information. This leaves room for duplication.
Alabama schools in pilot program to track students riding buses
The Huntsville, Ala. school district is conducting a pilot program that will track when and where students get on and off the bus. Currently, three schools–an elementary, middle and high school–are involved in the pilot.
Each student in the program will be assigned an RFID-enabled card, which they will use each time they enter or exit the bus. Coupled with GPS technology, the card reader records the location of the bus at the time of the swipe and loads that information onto the district’s computer network. At any time, administrators can pull up the data–including a map–and see where a student either entered or exited a bus.
Fingerprint scanners and healthier menus are some of the renovations for schools in the Tallmadge, Ohio City School District. The finger scanners alone speed up the lunch lines as students no longer have to juggle cash when paying for their lunch.
The scanners identify students and faculty, but the fingerprints aren’t collected. The scanners also eliminate the possibility of a student being identified as a beneficiary of free or reduced lunches.
With the new system, parents can pay for their students’ lunches via a Web site while school administrators can track what items are being eaten.
Munroe Elementary School in Tallmadge, Ohio is upgrading its cafeteria to be cash-free when the students return form winter break relying instead on biometrics for students to access accounts for their food, according to a Tallmadge Express article.
The change, which is designed off a system at nearby Hudson City Schools to help make lines move quicker, is part of a school overhaul of its dining program that also includes changes in the offerings to help improve the diets of the students.
The fingerprint-based systems are not entirely new to the schools, as they already been running in middle and high schools in Tallmadge. The system at Munroe will be the first to run entirely cashless without an option for students to pay in cash, which may expand to all the schools.
While the school is looking forward to having quicker lines with no lost money issues, it is also hopeful the cashless system will see benefits in a cut-down of germ transmissions and will enable students that receive financial assistance with their meals to better remain anonymous to their classmates.
High schools in Jefferson County, W.V. will be implementing biometric finger scanning in an effort to provide security for the students’ cafeteria accounts. Purpose of the program, according to school officials, is to eliminate clerical errors and to provide students with an easy way to identify themselves when using the cafeteria.
Using the finger scanner provided by identiMetrics, the software scans the finger to create and store individual templates of unique points that ID each student.
When the student returns to the cafeteria, his finger is again scanned and if a match is found in the database, the student is identified.
Students in Cabell County middle and high schools will soon be paying for their meals using fingerprint scanning technology, according to The Herald-Dispatch.
Cabell County joins other counties in West Virginia already using the technology in an effort to improve the speed and accuracy of school breakfast and lunch lines. The county sent out letters to parents notifying them of the change, but still questions and concerns have been raised regarding the fingerprint scanning system.
For elementary students, the teacher in each classroom takes a count of how many students plan to eat that day and passes the information, via a touch screen, on to the cafeteria.
Parents can use the Salem School Web site to post money to their student’s account.
A Scottish junior high school is testing a system that enables students to pay for their school meals with a card. Sandwick Junior High School has become the first school in Shetland to test the system where pupils, whose parents opted into the program, pay for their lunches with a swipe card.
The program is likely to be popular with many of the school’s 175 pupils wanting to be part of it, said head teacher Stuart Clubb. Eventually it is anticipated that the card can also be used for other activities, such as bus fares or payments for school trips.
“The benefit is that it removes the need for pupils to be taking cash into school, it reduces the administration in collecting money and there will be less cash in the building,” said Clubb.
Pupils can register by computer and, once activated, their parents can go online and load the card. Or, the cards can be loaded at school.
Patients will be monitored in the most personal way imaginable, from the inside-out. Microchips on pills to enforce obedience to the medical regime will be used in the UK by the end of the year.
The so-called “failure” of patients to take their medicine is cited as the reason for this loss of privacy. People are conceptualized as pathetic children unable to decide how their own bodies should be managed. No possibility of a person’s right to choose not to take a prescribed pharmaceutical drug is considered.
The product, named Helius® (also known as the Raisin Personal Monitor), is made by Proteus Biomedical, a California corporation. A contract signed with Lloyd’s Pharmacies in the UK will give them exclusive rights to sell the product for three years. Initially, Helius will be sold to patients, families, and caregivers. However, the NHS is looking into using it.
Washington D.C. high school and middle school students now need a DC One Card to ride the city’s transit system. The card is a single ID card that gives students access to most D.C. government programs and facilities, including recreation centers, libraries, and the Metro.
The new rule went into effect Jan. 1 and students should have automatically received the card at their school.
In addition, students or parents can apply online for the school transit subsidy, which provides reduced fares for District students who use Metrobus, Metrorail or the DC Circulator to travel to and from school.
A revolutionary microchip will allow doctors and nurses to administer drugs inside your body by phone from miles away.
The revolutionary implant can be controlled wirelessly by a doctor or nurse using a phone or computer to release drugs in the right amounts at regular times by remote control.
Cancer patients and others who need to take drugs and medicines at set times during the day would never again have to worry they will forget to take their drugs.
Roughly
the size of a pacemaker, the device holds daily doses of a drug inside
tiny wells that pop open either on a pre-programmed schedule or via a
wireless signal. The
The Pinellas County School Board District in Clearwater, Fla. has paired up with technology provider Fujitsu Frontech North America to provide a reliable and secure method of handling school food service program transactions.
With more than 102,000 students, the district is the seventh largest in the state and the 24th largest in the nation. Efficiently serving this large population has, at times, proven challenging for the district, particularly in the school cafeteria snack and lunch lines.
Officials have tried everything from swipe cards to PINs, none of which seemed to help. The district even tested a fingerprint scanning system but it proved unreliable. “Students would place their finger on the scanner and leave behind oil, dirt, and residues. This would cause the system to malfunction or freeze up delaying the cafeteria lunch lines,” said Art Dunham, director of Food Service Department at Pinellas County Schools.
Then the district learned about vascular biometrics. Unlike other biometrics, vascular devices don’t require contact with the student’s skin so they are hygienic, non-intrusive and unrestricted by external factors such as skin types and conditions. They identified Fujitsu Frontech and its PalmSecure biometric sensor.
Maui High School, located in Kahului, Hawaii, has adopted an automated meal card system now requiring students to use their student ID when purchasing meals in the cafeteria.
Students will each be issued a new student ID badge which links to a meal account. When meals are purchased, funds are taken from the student’s meal account. The meal account is similar to a debit card account, allowing cash deposits to be made by students or parents.
Cash will no longer be accepted when students pick up their meals in the cafeteria. If a student does not have a meal card for a particular day they can request a temporary issue from school’s main office. Excessive requests could result in disciplinary action carried out by administration to ensure student responsibility.
The required use of student identification badges for our meal system reinforces our school’s policy of mandatory student ID badges, said Maui High School, which provides security measures and school activities for our students on our school camps.
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
By: Eddie Sage
Date: 2012-03-27
Predictive programming is a subtle form
of psychological conditioning provided by the media to acquaint the
public with planned societal changes to be implemented. If and when
these changes are put through, the public will already be familiarized
with them and will accept them as ‘natural progressions’; thus lessening
any possible public resistance and commotion. Predictive programming
therefore may be considered as a veiled form of preemptive mass
manipulation or mind control.
Predictive Programming and the Human
Microchipping Agenda confirms the reality of the microchip agenda, and
shows that the weapon of propaganda has been used against the public for
decades in order to familiarize us with the idea of being chipped. This
process is called predictive programming and its purpose is literally
to program the mind of the victim so as to accept without question
whatever is required by the programmer – in this case, the idea of being
microchipped at some point in the future. The victim is generally
unaware of being programmed, believing that it’s all just harmless
entertainment. For this reason it can be a powerful and effective weapon
against us.
By explaining this process and giving example after example, Predictive Programming and the Human Microchipping Agenda is an attempt to alert the viewer to some of the ways in which we have been manipulated throughout our lives for the specific purpose of slowly but surely shepherding us all into a Hellish world of microchip implants and totalitarian control. We hope that by exposing the programming we can break the program and derail this diabolical agenda. To be successful we need your help.
We can clearly see how we slowly being brainwashed and forced to believe that it is in our benefit and convenience. We are slowly micro-chipping our children by convincing ourselves that it is for our peace of mind and for their safety. In the process we are getting them use to this kind of a way of life.
We are getting our children so use to and dependent on these ID’s and RFID chips that by the time they are adults they can not function without them.
It started with the micro-chipping of animals, first voluntarily and now often by law, and the same method is being used on humans.
Just Remember human life can not be degraded to a 16 digit RFID chip number embedded under you skin under any circumstance.
Below are many highly revealing excerpts of important microchip implants news stories reported in the major media.
RFID Chips Being Added To Brazillian Children’s School Uniforms
Some
20,000 pupils in the north-eastern city of Vitoria da Conquista will
have microchips embedded in their school T-shirts. The parents will get a
text message when their children arrive at school, or if they are late
for classes. The authorities say the measure will help teacher-parent
relations. The authorities say the measure will help teacher-parent relations. The authorities in Vitoria da Conquista, Bahia state, call the micro chipped T-shirts “intelligent uniforms”. They
say that by next year all local pupils aged up to 14 would use
them. The city’s education director, Coriolano Moraes, says the measure
was introduced because parents were not aware that their children were
missing school. “We noticed that many parents would bring their children
to school but would not see if they actually entered the building
because they always left in a hurry to get to work,” he told the
Associated Press news agency.
The chips are placed underneath the badge of a school uniform, or on a sleeve. When a pupil passes through sensors at the school entrance, the chip sends an SMS message to parents. If they are more than 20 minutes late for class, their families are alerted with a different message: “Your child has still not arrived at school.”
The local government has invested about $700,000 (£442, 531) to set up the system.
Ghana preps for first biometric vote
Ghana
is getting ready for its first-ever biometric voter registration ahead
of December’s general elections. The $45-million project has been
piloted in some areas, but social and technological difficulties remain,
according to a report in Voice of America.
Ghana joins Nigeria, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo who adopted the fingerprint scanning technology to help prevent electoral fraud.
Ghana hopes the bio-metric system will verify that those who are voting should be voting, and that they only vote once.
There are complications with the system. There are 23,000 polling stations in the country, but they are not interconnected to share registration information. This leaves room for duplication.
Alabama schools in pilot program to track students riding buses
The Huntsville, Ala. school district is conducting a pilot program that will track when and where students get on and off the bus. Currently, three schools–an elementary, middle and high school–are involved in the pilot.
The
program, which kicks off next month, involves the 300 students tapping
their ID card against a reader installed in each bus. If successful,
said a district spokesman, the program could be expanded district-wide.
The
system, called ZPass, will enable school administrators to keep better
track of those students who ride the bus and is designed to keep
children safe.
Each student in the program will be assigned an RFID-enabled card, which they will use each time they enter or exit the bus. Coupled with GPS technology, the card reader records the location of the bus at the time of the swipe and loads that information onto the district’s computer network. At any time, administrators can pull up the data–including a map–and see where a student either entered or exited a bus.
Lunchrooms in Ohio school districtundergo overhaul
Fingerprint scanners and healthier menus are some of the renovations for schools in the Tallmadge, Ohio City School District. The finger scanners alone speed up the lunch lines as students no longer have to juggle cash when paying for their lunch.
The scanners identify students and faculty, but the fingerprints aren’t collected. The scanners also eliminate the possibility of a student being identified as a beneficiary of free or reduced lunches.
With the new system, parents can pay for their students’ lunches via a Web site while school administrators can track what items are being eaten.
Ohio elementary school gets biometric cafeterias
Munroe Elementary School in Tallmadge, Ohio is upgrading its cafeteria to be cash-free when the students return form winter break relying instead on biometrics for students to access accounts for their food, according to a Tallmadge Express article.
The change, which is designed off a system at nearby Hudson City Schools to help make lines move quicker, is part of a school overhaul of its dining program that also includes changes in the offerings to help improve the diets of the students.
The fingerprint-based systems are not entirely new to the schools, as they already been running in middle and high schools in Tallmadge. The system at Munroe will be the first to run entirely cashless without an option for students to pay in cash, which may expand to all the schools.
While the school is looking forward to having quicker lines with no lost money issues, it is also hopeful the cashless system will see benefits in a cut-down of germ transmissions and will enable students that receive financial assistance with their meals to better remain anonymous to their classmates.
Finger scanning utilized at two West Virginia high schools
High schools in Jefferson County, W.V. will be implementing biometric finger scanning in an effort to provide security for the students’ cafeteria accounts. Purpose of the program, according to school officials, is to eliminate clerical errors and to provide students with an easy way to identify themselves when using the cafeteria.
Using the finger scanner provided by identiMetrics, the software scans the finger to create and store individual templates of unique points that ID each student.
When the student returns to the cafeteria, his finger is again scanned and if a match is found in the database, the student is identified.
Students in Cabell County middle and high schools will soon be paying for their meals using fingerprint scanning technology, according to The Herald-Dispatch.
Cabell County joins other counties in West Virginia already using the technology in an effort to improve the speed and accuracy of school breakfast and lunch lines. The county sent out letters to parents notifying them of the change, but still questions and concerns have been raised regarding the fingerprint scanning system.
The
program will better protect students’ cafeteria account, while reducing
clerical errors that can occur on breakfast and lunch lines. It also
aims to eliminate the possibility of a students’ meal card being stolen
and used by another student, and will halt the problem of students
losing cards or forgetting account numbers.
Student ID number replaces cash at school cafeteria
Students
at the Salem, Ark. high school need to only punch in their ID number at
the start of the cafeteria line in order to eat lunch. The program,
called Etrition, includes a terminal at the start of the food service
line which eliminates the need for diners to pay cash and receive change
from a cashier.
For elementary students, the teacher in each classroom takes a count of how many students plan to eat that day and passes the information, via a touch screen, on to the cafeteria.
Parents can use the Salem School Web site to post money to their student’s account.
Cashless smart card pilot begins at Scotland school
A Scottish junior high school is testing a system that enables students to pay for their school meals with a card. Sandwick Junior High School has become the first school in Shetland to test the system where pupils, whose parents opted into the program, pay for their lunches with a swipe card.
The program is likely to be popular with many of the school’s 175 pupils wanting to be part of it, said head teacher Stuart Clubb. Eventually it is anticipated that the card can also be used for other activities, such as bus fares or payments for school trips.
“The benefit is that it removes the need for pupils to be taking cash into school, it reduces the administration in collecting money and there will be less cash in the building,” said Clubb.
Pupils can register by computer and, once activated, their parents can go online and load the card. Or, the cards can be loaded at school.
Privacy Disappears in Medication Laced with Microchips
Patients will be monitored in the most personal way imaginable, from the inside-out. Microchips on pills to enforce obedience to the medical regime will be used in the UK by the end of the year.
The so-called “failure” of patients to take their medicine is cited as the reason for this loss of privacy. People are conceptualized as pathetic children unable to decide how their own bodies should be managed. No possibility of a person’s right to choose not to take a prescribed pharmaceutical drug is considered.
The product, named Helius® (also known as the Raisin Personal Monitor), is made by Proteus Biomedical, a California corporation. A contract signed with Lloyd’s Pharmacies in the UK will give them exclusive rights to sell the product for three years. Initially, Helius will be sold to patients, families, and caregivers. However, the NHS is looking into using it.
Washington, D.C. students now need DC’sOne Card
Washington D.C. high school and middle school students now need a DC One Card to ride the city’s transit system. The card is a single ID card that gives students access to most D.C. government programs and facilities, including recreation centers, libraries, and the Metro.
The new rule went into effect Jan. 1 and students should have automatically received the card at their school.
If
students don’t have a DC One Card, they should contact their school
immediately. The same requirement will also apply to all K-5 schools and
all educational campuses beginning Jan.16.
In addition, students or parents can apply online for the school transit subsidy, which provides reduced fares for District students who use Metrobus, Metrorail or the DC Circulator to travel to and from school.
New microchip will let doctor administer drugs into your body over the phone
A revolutionary microchip will allow doctors and nurses to administer drugs inside your body by phone from miles away.
The revolutionary implant can be controlled wirelessly by a doctor or nurse using a phone or computer to release drugs in the right amounts at regular times by remote control.
Cancer patients and others who need to take drugs and medicines at set times during the day would never again have to worry they will forget to take their drugs.
Roughly
the size of a pacemaker, the device holds daily doses of a drug inside
tiny wells that pop open either on a pre-programmed schedule or via a
wireless signal. The
company
plans to file for regulatory approval for its first microchip device in
2014 and says it could be widely available in five years.
Fla. schools use palm vein forlunch payments
The Pinellas County School Board District in Clearwater, Fla. has paired up with technology provider Fujitsu Frontech North America to provide a reliable and secure method of handling school food service program transactions.
With more than 102,000 students, the district is the seventh largest in the state and the 24th largest in the nation. Efficiently serving this large population has, at times, proven challenging for the district, particularly in the school cafeteria snack and lunch lines.
Officials have tried everything from swipe cards to PINs, none of which seemed to help. The district even tested a fingerprint scanning system but it proved unreliable. “Students would place their finger on the scanner and leave behind oil, dirt, and residues. This would cause the system to malfunction or freeze up delaying the cafeteria lunch lines,” said Art Dunham, director of Food Service Department at Pinellas County Schools.
Then the district learned about vascular biometrics. Unlike other biometrics, vascular devices don’t require contact with the student’s skin so they are hygienic, non-intrusive and unrestricted by external factors such as skin types and conditions. They identified Fujitsu Frontech and its PalmSecure biometric sensor.
PalmSecure
uses near-infrared light to capture and store a student’s palm vein
pattern, generating a unique biometric template that is matched against
pre-registered user palm vein patterns. This makes forgery virtually
impossible.
No more cash, Maui High School installs automated campus meal card system
Maui High School, located in Kahului, Hawaii, has adopted an automated meal card system now requiring students to use their student ID when purchasing meals in the cafeteria.
Students will each be issued a new student ID badge which links to a meal account. When meals are purchased, funds are taken from the student’s meal account. The meal account is similar to a debit card account, allowing cash deposits to be made by students or parents.
Cash will no longer be accepted when students pick up their meals in the cafeteria. If a student does not have a meal card for a particular day they can request a temporary issue from school’s main office. Excessive requests could result in disciplinary action carried out by administration to ensure student responsibility.
The required use of student identification badges for our meal system reinforces our school’s policy of mandatory student ID badges, said Maui High School, which provides security measures and school activities for our students on our school camps.
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Hmm, I'm not convinced at all by the micro-chipping-of-all agenda. Sure, there were one or two hundred thousand military personnel who were micro-chipped but this makes tactical asset-rediscovery sense.
ReplyDeleteThe chipping of the mobile phone IMHO is far more important to You The Consumer. Everybody already has a mobile phone (except myself and a few friends) and it's the perfect thing to attach a stick-on contactless credit card to.
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